Find Us Online:

You are here:Home»Editorial: More Citizens Demand Repeal of Wisconsin Mining Law

Editorial: More Citizens Demand Repeal of Wisconsin Mining Law

December 20, 2013 by WCMC guest

The following letter appeared in papers around the state, with over 100 signatures from elected officials, business owners and residents, and came from Minnesota, Michigan, Illinois and throughout Wisconsin. Please leave your name and location in the comment section below if you agree.

Dear Editor

The Tyler Forks River with Carolyn Lake and the headwaters of the Bad River. This land is sacred ground for the Anishinaabeg, and provides the fresh water for the entire area. The mine will go directly in its path. Photo: Larry Kinnett

According to Sen. Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau), Wisconsin mining and environmental laws under Governor Walker’s watch have been written by Gogebic Taconite. GTac is proposing a 22-mile open pit taconite mine in the Penokee hills of Northern Wisconsin.

Given the irreparable damage that a taconite mine would do to the Penokee/Bad River watershed, which provides pure drinking water for thousands of people, and nourishes the wild rice of the Kakagon Sloughs, the public needs to know the kind of person who is behind this scheme.

According to the December 15, 2013 article by Wisconsin Citizens Media Coop (WCMC), legal action is pending against GTac’s President, Bill Williams, for causing arsenic contamination in the groundwater while overseeing the Cobre Las Cruces (CLC) mine in Seville, Spain. Williams started work as Director of Cobre Las Cruces in January 2006, and seven months later, began extracting clean water and re-injecting wastewater back into the aquifer without the inspection certificate for the project (one of many violations).

One result of the unauthorized operation was contamination of a local aquifer with arsenic-tainted water, including flooding wells at a nearby farm. Similar contamination (and loss of well water altogether) is anticipated for farmers and residents of Northern Wisconsin, should GTac prevail.

Williams left Spain in 2010 to begin work for GTac and according to their now defunct website, he “managed all facets of the Cobre Las Cruces mining operation …” In July 2011, at a presentation in Ashland, he referred to CLC as a successful example of mining. While claiming that new (still-not-revealed) technology would save the Bad River Watershed from the negative impacts of mountaintop removal, he was fully aware of the impending legal action against him for severe environmental damage.

Williams has exhausted three appeals in Spain and according to Ecologistas en Acción, is expected to be served by the courts as soon as the trial date is set.

Williams misled Wisconsin by failing to disclose the circumstances at CLC and lied by saying that CLC was a success. Along with lobbyists Bob Seitz and Tim Myers, GTac denies verifiable scientific evidence; discredits experts who warn of environmental disaster; hired an illegal (un-permitted) paramilitary to frighten citizens legally accessing managed forest land; and has bought off legislators in order to pass mining laws written by the company itself. Bill Williams and GTac have demonstrated criminal intentions and should not be allowed in the state.

We are hopeful that the people of Wisconsin care enough about their water and land that they will take action to repeal mining laws that have been put in place by what can only be termed eco-terrorists. For detailed background on this story, please access: http://wcmcoop.com.

The so-called “ferrous mining bill” SB/AB 1 was premised on fake science, never had any real support among Wisconsin citizens, and has opened the door to an incompetent out of state hillbilly mining operation and its criminally negligent CEO Bill Williams. He fooled the Spanish authorities but we don’t have the excuse of ignorance. There’s no justification for putting the Bad River and people of Lake Superior at risk from this rotten legislation. Repeal the exemptions from our mining law for Gogebic Taconite.